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Counterterrorism Units
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Mission Statement
The New York City Police Department (NYPD) is the
primary local authority defending against a terrorist attack in New York City.
Built upon the realization that the City could not rely solely on the federal
government for its defense, the Counterterrorism Bureau was created by Police
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly in 2002 as the first unit of its kind in the
nation. Since then, the Counterterrorism Bureau has been at the forefront of
this new aspect of municipal policing: counterterrorism for local law
enforcement. The mission of the Counterterrorism Bureau is to develop
innovative, forward-looking policies and procedures to guard against the threat
of international and domestic terrorism in New York City. One such policy puts
uniformed counterterrorism executives in the rank of Inspector in positions to
lead borough and citywide counterterrorism activities. Furthermore, the Joint
Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) has been enhanced with a dramatically larger
complement of NYPD investigators and supervisors.
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Office of the Deputy Commissioner for Counterterrorism
The NYPD has assembled a team of experienced leaders
both from within and outside the Department to lead the Counterterrorism Bureau.
Dr. Richard A. Falkenrath, the Deputy Commissioner for Counterterrorism, is
responsible for the overall strategy and development of policies for the Bureau.
His leadership team includes: Assistant Chief James Waters, former commander of
the New York Joint Terrorism Task Force, serving as Commanding Officer of the
Counterterrorism Bureau and Dr. Dani-Margot Zavasky, an infectious disease
specialist, serving as the Medical Director, responsible for advising the
Department leadership on medical issues pertaining to chemical, biological,
radiological, and nuclear threats. The Bureau also includes a
Planning and Policy team, which is responsible for the
review, analysis, and development of initiatives, policies, and legislative
agendas related to counterterrorism.
The NYPD has transformed the role of local police at all
levels of the Department in an effort to protect the city's 8.2 million
residents from terrorism. The Counterterrorism Bureau accomplishes this through
its Borough Counterterrorism Coordinators, senior uniformed members in the rank
of Inspector who are responsible for counterterrorism operations in New York
City's eight patrol boroughs. These officers are led by Deputy Chief Vincent
Giordano, the Bureau's Citywide Coordinator and operational liaison with the
Intelligence Division and Patrol Services and Transit Bureaus. Patrol officers
draw on their understanding of the neighborhoods they patrol to report any
potentially terrorism-related developments. They protect critical infrastructure
and conduct high visibility deployments to disrupt terrorist planning and
surveillance based on real-time intelligence.
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Counterterrorism Deployments
The Department's strategic and continuous
counterterrorism deployments include: Hercules and Transit Operational Response
Canine Heavy Weapons (TORCH), teams of Emergency Service Unit officers with
heavy weapons, canines, and side officers from the Intelligence Division or the
Counterterrorism Bureau conduct directed patrol at City landmarks, critical
infrastructure, and transportation hubs (transit stations/ferry terminals);
Critical Response Vehicle (CRV), uniformed officers from each of the City's 76
precincts in marked vehicles meeting at strategic locations in a massive show
of force for deployment around the city at bridges,
transportation facilities, and other highly critical and sensitive locations; Transit Order Maintenance
Sweeps (TOMS), teams of officers stopping, boarding and
inspecting subway trains; and subway container inspection and explosive trace detection, in
which officers examine bags and other containers carried by passengers entering the subway
system to detect explosives. Vehicle checkpoints and radiological chokepoints are conducted
at targeted roadways, bridges, and tunnels around the City. Joint
deployments are conducted with regional law enforcement agencies doing Multi-Agency
Surges (MAS) in transit facilities and Rolling Vigilance checkpoints for truck
inspections and radiological detection on highways and at bridges and
tunnels.
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Counterterrorism Division
Much of the support for the Counterterrorism Bureau
comes from the Counterterrorism Division, a subunit with wide-ranging
capabilities and responsibilities commanded by Deputy Chief Joseph McKeever. The
Division is divided into multiple subunits:
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The Technology and Construction Section designs and
implements large scale counterterrorism projects, such as the Lower Manhattan
Security Initiative and Operation Sentinel, bringing them from initial
concepts to deployable operations;
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The Training Section develops and delivers
counterterrorism training to the patrol force and to other law enforcement
agencies and private sector entities;
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The Threat Reduction Infrastructure Protection
Section (TRIPS) identify critical infrastructure sites throughout the City and
develop protective strategies for these sites;
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The Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and
Explosives (CBRNE) Section researches and tests emerging technologies used to
detect and combat chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive
weapons and develops plans and policies for their use;
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The Maritime Team is responsible for researching and
developing systems and programs to increase harbor security. The Maritime Team
uses the Tactical Radiological Acquisition Characterization System for pro
active deployments and mapping of background radiation in the Port of New
York/New Jersey. This is the only waterborne deployment of TRACS equipment in
the nation.
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The NYPD SHIELD Unit manages the Department's
public-private security partnership, providing training and information to the
private sector and addressing concerns from the private sector. See the NYPD
SHIELD website;
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The Emergency Preparedness and Exercise Section is
the Department's interface with the New York City Office of Emergency
Management.
Police Commissioner Kelly has said that, "One of the
stated aims of the terrorists is to attack America's economy. Nothing represents
the nation's financial and commercial strength more than New York and the world
class companies that call it home." This is why the Counterterrorism Bureau is
currently developing the Lower Manhattan Security Initiative to secure key
financial sites like the New York Stock Exchange and the headquarters of leading
companies and financial institutions in Lower Manhattan. Furthermore, the NYPD
has been actively engaged in the Securing the Cities Initiative, with multiple
joint exercises successfully completed. The Securing the Cities Initiative in
the New York City region is presently the only initiative of its type anywhere
in the country.
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Joint Terrorism Task Force:
After the 9/11 attacks, the NYPD augmented the number of
detectives and supervisors posted to New York City's Joint Terrorism Task Force
(JTTF) from 17 to 125 and assigned them to the operational control of the
Counterterrorism Bureau. NYPD detectives partner with FBI agents on terrorism
investigations in the New York metro area and around the world. Indeed, the
NY-JTTF has had the lead on numerous high profile international terrorism
investigations, such as the 1993 WTC attack, the U.S. Embassy bombings in East
Africa, and the attack on the U.S.S. Cole. The NYPD's partnership with the FBI
through the JTTF not only provides the NYPD with access to national level
classified intelligence, but it is also a means by which NYPD
can disseminate its own intelligence and analysis at the federal
level and to other law enforcement agencies.
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Lower Manhattan Security Initiative (LMSI):
The Lower Manhattan Security Initiative (LMSI) is a
networked surveillance project designed to detect threats and perform
pre-operational terrorist surveillance south of Canal Street in Lower
Manhattan. LMSI combines an increased police presence with technology to
accomplish its mission. At the heart of this initiative is the
public-private partnership fostered amongst the NYPD, private entities, and
public agencies in Lower Manhattan to create an information sharing environment
and better defend against potential threats to the nation's financial
capital. The Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center (LMSCC), staffed
24/7 by NYPD officers, recently opened in November 2008 and serves as the
central intake facility for all information gathered by the surveillance
technology deployed south of Canal Street. Private and public partners are
offered seats in the Coordination Center's Operations Center.
Terrorism Threat Analysis
Group: The Terrorism Threat
Analysis Group (TTAG) performs strategic intelligence analysis and disseminates
this information, both open-source and classified, to the appropriate recipients
in the Department, the private sector, the U.S. intelligence community, and
other law enforcement agencies.
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Conclusion
New York City has experienced first-hand the threat of
international terrorism and remains number one on al-Qaeda's target list. The
NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau is constantly fine tuning its strategies and
operations to meet this threat head on.
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